And here is a fascinating video:
2/2 Above all, it was based on wildly optimistic assessments about the welcome Russian troops would receive in Ukraine. Russia has now adopted a “strategy of attrition” and is achieving slow and costly gains in the Donbas. #StandWithUkraine
— Ministry of Defence ๐ฌ๐ง (@DefenceHQ) June 3, 2022
What will happen is more Ukrainians will die. Russia will take more territory. Ukrainians will fight a brutal and bloody insurgent campaign. Those under Russian occupation will be tortured, imprisoned, deported, possibly executed. We know this became THIS ALREADY HAPPENS
— Danny Gold (@DGisSERIOUS) June 3, 2022
This Atlantic article, though it also talks about a truce, makes a little more sense:They literally sent kill teams into Kyiv. This is a real thing that happened in the first days of the war. You think they’ll listen to anything but force? You think Ukrainians trust anything they say when it comes to peace?
— Danny Gold (@DGisSERIOUS) June 3, 2022
Former assistant defense secretary Andrew Exum writes:Western Support for Ukraine Has Peaked - The Atlantic https://t.co/UMTf4JsJmh
— ๐๐รก๐ ๐พ’๐๐๐๐ Global News (@ConsumerSOS) June 2, 2022
...the economic costs of the war are starting to seriously concern American and other Western policy makers....The twin pressures of an ailing economy and surging populism will be on the minds of Western decision makers as they wrestle with a war that will continue to take a toll on the world’s leading economies.For that reason, the conversations between Ukraine and its supporters abroad are likely to grow harder, not easier, as the year progresses.Ukraine will come under more pressure, and not just from Henry Kissinger, to concede some territory and allow Russia to save face. Even a hasty termination of the conflict, however, seems unlikely to arrest the world’s slide into greater economic pain....